I'I think Blackberry runs on its own operating system, there are zillions of apps available for an iphone, but very few of the same ones are compatible with a blackberry and vice versa.
Yes, there is currently a six-way war going on with Android, Apple, Blackberry, Microsoft, Palm and Symbian smartphones all being incompatible and unable to run software written for one of the others. Clearly, there are going to be fewer than six winners (plus at least two of that lot have competing systems themselves and I might even have missed out a contender or two!)
For call blocking you can rule out, say, Microsoft completely as they have got the Apple-like control freak bug. Call blockers need to run all the time and Windows Mobile 7 phones only let a few companies' software do that.
I obviously need to be able to keep the same number and I'd rather be able to use the same SIM card (Tesco Mobile) as all my numbers are already stored on it.
I know it's slightly off the topic, but can anybody recommend a phone for this? (I've seen a nice little Sony one
) And how difficult is it to actually get hold of these call/text blocking features and install them on the thing yourself? Bear in mind I can barely change the ringtone without help on most handsets
.
My primary has recently gone from ancient Nokia to an HTC Wildfire running Android. Just plugging in the SIM got all the numbers off that. It will also get contacts from Gmail easily.
Installing Android programs is a case of pressing 'show me all
apps programs', scroll to 'Market', press, find, enter 'call blocker' (or what ever else you're after: there are hundreds of thousands of programs, so searching by name makes sense), look through the list.
Pressing on one gives an 'about' page, with the ability to see other people's comments on it (as with escort reviews not all of these are necessarily genuine), then, if you want to install it, it's a simple tap on install, you see what the program wants to be able to do on your phone, 'OK'. It will then download itself, install, and appear in the list of programs.
The first time you pick something you need to pay for, there's a registration process.
Your biggest issue will be finding the usual hassle around changing phones: buying one with/without a contract, possibly moving the number between networks, etc etc. Which Sony?